Oct 092010
 

Sometime today/tonight we’re going to attempt a monumental Back Office feat. Our goal is to move RTH off of the old and aging current platform onto a bright new shiny one. There will certainly be hitches some of which we are already aware of and will address as soon as possible but there will be others. Hopefully the ability to login and comment will remain active and we can use this thread to point out issues. In the unlikely case that login and/or comment is unavailable we will post updates here on the Main Stage to keep you up to date. In the even more unlikely case that the site is down altogether, please refer to the RTH Facebook page for updates: http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Rock-Town-Hall/158988548773

Note that anytime over the next 24-48 hours comments and posts made may not make it to the new platform. Sadly this Foreigner vid will.

Thank you for your attention.

Share
Oct 072010
 

We spend a lot of time and energy around here being ever-so-slightly cleverer than the rest of the rock blog world — and that’s usually a good thing. But sometimes you just want some editorial comfort food — something reasonably filling, and vaguely tasty. Something tried and true. Something like… a KRAZY KAPTION KONTEST!

Rules are simple enough: following is a selection of funny fotos from around the web. Your job is to assign a KRAZY KAPTION to as many of them as you please. Of course, as in all things RTH, your KRAZY KAPTION must reference the Rock. For extra credit:

  • Pick any three photos and give us captions that separately reference a song, an artist, and an album.
  • Create a narrative flow between any three photos using your captions.
  • Reference Bob Seger in any of your captions.

Winning captions will be chosen by Mr. Moderator, and proudly displayed on our front page for, oh, at least a day. Of course, all winners receive the coveted RTH No-Prize.

I look forward to your KRAZY KAPTIONS.

HVB

ONE

TWO
Continue reading »

Share
Oct 072010
 


First, what must have been the commercially released video to accompany this star-studded cover of The Buzzcocks’ most-successful song. A list of the contributing artists appears toward the end.

Then, if the notion of the UK as a small, close-knit music community unlike anything we could imagine in the United States still hasn’t hit you, there’s the following, more mind-blowing homemade video: Continue reading »

Share
Oct 062010
 

Townspeople,

This is your Rock Town Hall!

If you’ve already got Back Office privileges and can initiate threads, by all means use your privileges! If you’d like to acquire such privileges, let us know. If you’ve got a comment that needs to be made, what are you waiting for? If you’re just dropping in and find yourself feeling the need to scat, don’t hesitate to register and post your thoughts. The world of intelligent rock discussion benefits from your participation. If nothing else, your own Mr. Moderator gets a day off from himself. It’s a good thing for you as well as me!
Continue reading »

Share
Oct 062010
 

I know some of you will pick up what I’m about to lay down here: Huey Lewis didn’t suck. In fact, I’d say he was, on the whole, quite good for American popular music, in the same savior-of-AM-radio kind of way that Hall & Oates were. Not sure his hits were quite on the same level, but — come on — does “Heart & Soul” suck? How about “This Is It”? Of course they don’t suck!

In fact, I’d go further to say that HL&tN had a run of pretty darn good singles, many of which did a good job breathing life — perhaps not stylistically “new” life, but real life — into some pretty moldy American music forms. Dude played songs like “This Is It” straight — and that’s why the song doesn’t suck. Compare to “Uptown Girl,” a similar kind of retro-vibed track by Billy Joel. In Joel’s hands, this kind of faux-’50s number really grates. But when Huey gets his hands on the stuff, he doesn’t play-act; he just sings.

I dunno, I guess I’ve entered a phase where some formerly overplayed pop music is starting to come around for me. I’ve come to realize that the reasons why we like songs eventually surpass the reasons why we grew sick of them — and Huey Lewis made some of that kind of music. I’m still not sure I’m ready to download Sports, or whatever that ’80s Everyman album of his was called — but I was sure happy to hear “Heart & Soul” coming through the speakers at the cheese store today.

Here’s to the simple pleasures of life. Here’s to Huey Lewis.

HVB

Share

Lost Password?

 
twitter facebook youtube